Building better bones

What if we could create custom bone implants that would trigger their own replacement with real bone? Jakus and colleagues have done just this with a promising biomaterial that can be 3D-printed into many shapes and easily deployed in the operating room. Made mainly of hydroxyapatite and either polycaprolactone or poly(lactic-co-glycolic acid), this “hyperelastic bone” can be 3D-printed at up to 275 cm3/hour, the authors report. It also promoted bone growth in vitro, in mice and rats, and in a case study of skull repair in a rhesus macaque. Its effectiveness, fast, easy synthesis, and ease of use in surgery set it apart from many of the materials now available for bone repair.